33 Burst results for "Reshot"

The Crypto Conversation
A highlight from Scaling Business with AI Superpowers
"Hi everyone, Andy Pickering here, I'm your host and welcome to the Crypto Conversation, a Brave New Coin podcast where we talk to the people building the future in the Bitcoin, blockchain, and cryptocurrency space. Five years ago, deep in a bear market, a group of traditional finance experts founded Bitget, and they've been building ever since. Now with 20 million users worldwide, Bitget is committed to helping users trade smarter by providing a secure one -stop crypto investment solution with copy trading, future trading, and spot trading. Your security is their priority and Bitget has one of the largest protection funds in the industry with US $300 million to cover potential trader losses from unforeseen events that are not due to misconduct from the user or platform. Bitget wants to inspire everyone to embrace Web3, so if you're new to crypto, learn more at the Bitget Academy with free blockchain courses, crypto guides, cryptocurrency trading strategies, and more. Or for the experienced investor, trade smarter with daily access to institutional -grade crypto market intelligence and trends analysis with Bitget research. I've put links to Bitget research and the Bitget Academy in the show notes, so get amongst it, or simply go to bitget .com. Thank you to Bitget, and now it is on with the show. My guest today is Justin Flitter. Justin is the founder of New Zealand AI, among other things. Welcome to the show, Justin. Cheers, Andy. It's nice to be here. Nice to have you here. Let's do what we do at the beginning of the show, Justin. I'll invite you to please introduce yourself. Love to just hear a little bit of your, I suppose, personal and professional backstory and what has led you to getting involved with AI. Yes, my name is Justin Flitter. I'm the founder of New Zealand .ai. We are the place where New Zealand businesses start their AI journey. And how have we got to be here? Well, I'm a marketer by trade, I guess, and along the last 20 -odd years have been curious and interested in emerging technology and how that plays out in marketing and business. I guess I can kind of share around the communities that we've created, whether that's the Young Professionals group in Wellington in 2006, we were getting 300 under -30s in monthly events coming and learning from each other through to founding the Auckland Social Media Club in 2009 and getting 300 people a month coming along to those events right at the kind of forefront of social media for business. And then in 2016, I was working for a company called Results .com and their board investors had come out of Diligent, which had a mega exit, and they'd invested in and created this company called Aria, which was a natural language processing organisation in the UK. And I started becoming curious around how natural language would impact the world of marketing, certainly as we were seeing devices like Amazon Alexa and Google Home and all sorts of things that we were starting to talk to these devices. And the way that we ask questions verbally is quite different from the way that we type things in a search bar. And so I started going to a whole lot of vendor events around Auckland and meant a whole lot of other people working in professional services like me trying to figure out what AI was, what the potential was, is it another fad, what's going on. And so I did a whole lot of research and eventually started a meetup called the AI Show. And the first event was at a dark and dingy bar in Britomart, but Shannon Thomas, who was then the external PR and comms lead for IBM New Zealand attended and she said, oh, we'll host the next one. And so then started quite a long partnership with AI Show and building an events programme, getting 200 -300 people a month along for several years, where we would showcase companies utilising artificial intelligence and share the expertise and the tools and the tech enabling the capability and discussing some of the pressing issues around how AI was changing people, society, the way we work. And yeah, and so that's kind of really been the journey. And I guess, you know, we ran AI Day, which was the two biggest AI conferences in New Zealand in 17 -18. And then COVID hurt and everything kind of went into hiatus, so we went back into some marketing contracting. And then in October last year, OpenAI launched ChatGBT and it completely changed the game for everybody. What's fascinating about this, Justin, is, I mean, the reason that you and I know each other, or at least are aware of each other, we're not sort of good friends or anything like that. But I've known who you are for more than a decade. And the reason for that is, you know, we've both been on Twitter, or what used to be called Twitter, for, well, let's just say for over 10 years, and certainly in, you know, smaller countries like New Zealand or tech communities, you know, it's easy to see, you know, those kind of identities such as yourself pop up. And it's incredible, though, if you kind of think back that, you know, AI, and I'll say blockchain as well, crypto, Bitcoin, have been reasonably, you know, from a mainstream perspective, reasonably esoteric, and very much niche topics for discussion on, on, let's say, Twitter, but, you know, suddenly, you know, the world is changing. And these things very much are going mainstream. And as you pointed out, you know, the world really literally did appear to change overnight at the end of last year, when, yeah, the first rollout of ChatGPT was unleashed into the wild, right? Absolutely. Yeah, it's doubled the website traffic. And all of a sudden, I was rebuilding the website and getting booked to speaker conferences and run workshops and things like that. And I think it's really, you know, I mean, AI has been around since the 50s, since that Dartmouth University, and the UK with Alan Turing and his cohorts. But, you know, for many decades, it's really been sitting in the research labs and, and, and for the, for the first time for the general public, I think ChatGPT makes AI interactive, we can use it, our mothers and fathers and our daughters can use the same tool that we might use for our research assignment or to understand complex charts, or to write a blog post or to research new markets. And, and that's just a staggering change in people's perception of what artificial intelligence could actually do for us. And, and so putting it front and centre and giving everyone a browser based, free, interactive experience where these machines are talking back to us in human language, is seismic. Indeed, and the Turing test has finally been passed and, you know, in spectacular fashion. So, you know, Justin, you work with an array of different businesses, I'm sure, smaller, smaller businesses, larger scale businesses. And, you know, you consult with them to help them identify, I suppose, the different ways that AI can perhaps improve their business processes. But I'm conscious also that, you know, a lot of businesses are a little bit conservative when it comes to the adoption of new technologies, they need to be risk averse. So it's often kind of tech savvy individuals are the ones that are first able to really leverage these new tools. But so curious, give us give us a sense of how you see and find to talk about New Zealand, you know, how you find the business community, what's their approach to the sudden availability of easy to access AI tooling? Yeah, on one hand, I think a lot of CEOs and C -suite leaders are asleep at the wheel here. And they're really, you know, they're a little bit, you know, they're not, I don't think they're paying enough attention to this at all. Yeah. On the other side, we are seeing a groundswell of change. And, you know, we've been running an AI for Business webinar series and workshop series through the Employers and Manufacturers Association. And, you know, one chat GPT webinar we did a month ago, we had 1200 people on the call. And so this is, you know, this is this is workers across all all levels who are starting to use personal chat GPT accounts to short shift their work. And so they're using it to augment some of the tasks that they have to do every day to increase productivity to help them do things faster, smarter. And a lot of senior leaders are seeing that activity. And they're concerned they don't have necessarily the same knowledge. They, you know, a lot of C -suite leaders I talked to have never even used chat GPT. I get asked questions around how do I install it? I'm like, you already have it installed. You simply have to open the browser. And so they're concerned around so what are they pasting? What are they sharing? You know, are they sharing our software code? Are they sharing, you know, customer information? What are they doing with us? And so they're putting the roadblocks on it. And we're seeing, you know, that's not the right way to be necessarily to be thinking about it. We need to be leaning in and we need to be providing the education and the resourcing and the guardrails around these tools the same as what we would do with any other new technology that's coming to the market and any new software tools that we have at our disposal to enable people to use them safely and responsibly. Yeah, absolutely. Well said. And, you know, one of the, I suppose, for the, you know, enterprise use cases, one of the faster growing sectors will be, I guess, the custom chat models that are native to a particular business. So that's important so that you can ensure, you know, whatever internal data that your business have that is obviously you want to keep that secure. But if you can have a chatbot that allows you to, you know, query your own data in any way possible, then that is an immediate benefit to your business and it alleviates some of those privacy concerns. Yeah, so I think, you know, certainly that's one of the most common use cases for businesses getting started on their AI journey and that's to unlock organizational data. And so we're seeing generative AI and conversational AI platforms now where you can integrate all your different company data sources, whether that's, you know, your finance with Xero or your Microsoft 365 and SharePoint or your file storage, your CRM, your ERP, all of these different types of data that you have, which are all traditionally siloed and specific job functions, can now be woven together into this mesh of data that generative AI can cross -reference to help you better understand the business, to generate new insights, to generate new content, to create new workflows, and ultimately to automate some of that repetitive processing that you have in your business, which sucks up employees' time and unproductive work. Yeah, and what's incredible about AI is the, you know, it is causing, let's just say, tensions, right, in almost every sector of society, if not now soon. So obviously in business we've talked about that a little bit, but like one other sector, of course, it's a simple one, but education, Justin, for example, you know, I have a 13 -year -old son, so he goes to what we call secondary school here in New Zealand. He'll start secondary school next year and I can see already that there's, I'm sure there's disagreement amongst, let's say, you know, school boards or amongst school teachers as to what is the best policy in terms of, you know, do you allow students access to AI tools? Do you try and, you know, run their essays through these clunky AI, you know, scanners? It doesn't work, it doesn't work. You can't detect AI writing. You can't, you can't. No matter what they say, you can't do it. That's right. So it's just like, this is a bit of a, yeah, a tricky one, Justin, but what do you think is the correct approach? And obviously it can evolve over time, but if you were heading up a school's education department at the moment, what would you say? When calculators came in, did schools ban calculators? Just, you know, like, you know, yes, but people can, they're still buying them at home, right? So, you know, banning something automatically creates demand for people to use it. Like you're saying, don't do this. So then everyone goes and does it. It's, you know, facts or well, whether you can call chat GPT fact -based chat GPT is a large language model that's designed to convince you that the next word in the sentence is correct, right? So it's, it's a production, a production model. So all it's, so, you know, you can't rely on, on the information that it's, it's given you all the time. There has to be a human in the look. It's there to augment our work. Now, if as a, and there are, there are schools and you know, obviously my opinion is that's just the completely wrong way to think about it. It's, it's it's naive. And, and we, and it comes because of a lack of education, a lack of awareness and lack of knowledge around how to use and leverage these. And you look to the, the US and, you know, when, when colleges are on holiday chat GPT usage goes down 30%. And so, you know, no matter what you, what you decide to do as an organization, students are going to be using this tool at every level of their education, because it can be that coach, mentor, support person, teacher, that's, that gives them that, that confidence that, that they need, right? It's there with them at every different stage of their learning journey so that they don't have to start from scratch. They're asking a question, they're getting a response, they're able to have a discussion about that particular topic. And so instead of the education system asking them, is the answer this or this? The answer, the question should be, how do you interpret that answer? Why do I think more deeply about that particular topic? Contextualize that response. Why is that meaningful? And so you, I guess it's, it's how we're thinking about critical thought. And, you know, we're, you know, you've got the entire world's knowledge base sitting in the DBT. You can literally ask it anything you want and, you know, generally get a reasonably good, reasonably good answer out of it. You do have to check it, but, you know, how we, how we, how we teach people, how we ask them, how we score knowledge and, and test knowledge and, and contextualize those insights for the world around us is something that, you know, we need to be getting students to do, to do more of. You know, I mean, I was at, I was at a University of Auckland, I was delivering a marketing lecture a few months ago, and a student asked me, he was like, if the lecturer gives us a book to read, why wouldn't I just go to chat GBT and ask it to give me a summary? And my answer was, because when you get into the next class and the teacher asks you what happened in chapter 13 to Mike, and how did that play out for the result of the story, you're not going to know the answer. So, you know, it's, it's only giving you a certain amount of, you know, knowledge. It's not giving you that contextualization in terms of what those ideas mean in the world that you live in. Yeah. Thank you, Justin. Very well said. You know, I mentioned the, you know, the tension across different parts of society. So another part of society, Justin, is, I suppose you'd say, broadly, the creative industries, but I'm more specifically thinking of, you know, tools like Mid -Journey and Dali, the incredible kind of, you know, on -demand instant photography, instant image generation. And it's incredible just in the last 12 months, much more sophisticated. Something like Mid -Journey has gotten, you know, a year ago, an AI couldn't really generate a realistic human hand. But now they can. And it's, if you extrapolate at forward five or 10 years, it's fairly easy to see that eventually you'd be able to generate, you know, short films or even like full length films from a detailed prompt, which is crazy to think about. But yeah, it'd be tough being a digital artist or graphic designer at the moment. I mean, you know, we're on the cusp, certainly in the next couple of years, of 80 -90 % of the content we use in marketing or, you know, many sectors being generated by AI. And that throws up a whole lot of unique challenges. But at the moment, like we're seeing short films being created, I mean, you know, two or three minutes. And at the moment, these are four to six second snippets stitched together with a soundtrack and a voice overlay, or voiced as well using AI. And so you've got Runway ML, you've got Pixel Labs, you've got a whole bunch of amazing tools. And I would say, given the pace of change, three to five years, I think we're seeing, you know, we're seeing, you know, full feature, full length movies being able to be generated. And you've got the ability where, and this is where that kind of writers and artists block and Hollywood is coming up because, you know, we can clone voices, we can clone actors. And so, you know, there's a, we can make people say and do anything we like once we've got some footage or some audio of them, which of course, makes that whole production of traditional films a whole lot easier. Because if you need, you know, it might take away the need to do a reshoot. If there's a slight tweak, then you could use some AI to do a slight tweak to something with editing and certainly in the post production. But none of this stuff is particularly easy just yet. And none of it's like particularly that good just yet. And certainly, you know, we've got a guy here, Steve Ballantyne, who runs an agency called Brand IQ. And they designed the cover for the New Zealand marketing magazine a couple of months ago. And, you know, that would have taken hundreds of hours to build the layers and the artistry around that. So, you know, while we're seeing some parts of production and execution being automated, the ideas and that creative freedom is just exploding. Yeah, it really is. And look, well, if that's the case, then, Justin, if AI is both a revolutionary tool and a weapon, what do we do now? That's the topic of the panel that I'm on at the Devonport Library tonight. It is indeed. Yeah, look, there's some immense global challenges around us. And, you know, we're seeing, you know, challenges around, you know, battle for Taiwan with between China and the US around semiconductors and the race for compute power and, you know, the computer parts that process the artificial intelligence. And, you know, along that we're seeing a race with Microsoft, AWS, Google, Facebook, and all of these that are, you know, they're all trying to vie for an advantage in the capability to generate, you know, to generate AI powered systems. So we're seeing, you know, drones now, you know, swarms of drones replacing firework shows. And so there's, you know, while there's always a super exciting, amazing, positive, humanity changing use case for almost all of those, there's also a potential for weaponization. And we're seeing the likes of the EU and debates around Capitol Hill discussing and regulations around privacy and copyright and those sorts of things. And, you know, certainly there are going to be some movements around that. The EU always takes a lead on these types of things. And generally, you know, New Zealand's a follower, not necessarily a fast follower, but a follower. And so we're kind of looking to the instruction and the guidance from the EU in terms of what that might look like. But, you know, it's a super complex environment. Some might argue the cat's out of the bag with lots of these things. You know, no one knows what's going on in the research labs necessarily. I mean, we've just seen, you know, we've got Neuralink, which is putting chips into brains to help people with different diseases and things like that to short circuit their processing. And now we've got a another startup and I'm just trying to find it actually. I posted it on LinkedIn this morning. And so they're actually building, they're actually putting growing brain cells around a chip. And so they're doing the complete opposite to Neuralink. And so that, yeah, so this guy was at, is at the brain conference in San Francisco today. He's Hon Wing. So Cordica is the name of it. And, you know, yeah, they're putting brain cells around chips instead of putting chips around brain cells. And I think there's, you know, a whole lot of, holy crap, what's coming next when we start thinking about the implications of that around GPU and computer processing and, you know, how we still haven't created AI or chips that are nearly as good as the human brain. So, you know, could this be a paradigm shift? Indeed, indeed. All right. Well, look, Justin, as we finish up this part of the podcast, just for anyone listening who's interested in learning more about what you and the team do at New Zealand .ai, I guess that's the best place for them to go. But yeah, where should people go? What should people do? Yeah, so we help businesses understand and learn where AI can thrive within their organization. We run a series of workshops, both kind of AI lunch and learn style, which is kind of AI for everyone. We do an executive leadership workshop where we deep dive into strategy and the potential use cases, how we're preparing the organization and building out that strategy and roadmap. And then once we kind of get to that point where an organization goes, yes, that's a really great solution, you know, the things that we can create using AI we couldn't imagine or do any other way, then we engage different partners from around New Zealand. So we don't produce any tech. We don't make any tech. We leverage the amazing technology businesses around New Zealand and in Australia to enable that. So we're bringing in partners to design, build and integrate those AI -powered systems into those businesses. So yeah, we're the place for businesses to start their AI journey and, you know, right through from curiosity to integration, we're helping to support that process. Awesome. And listeners, just go to New Zealand .ai link, of course, is in the show notes. Let's go do a very quick break and then we'll come back. We'll finish off. We'll have some fun. We'll run Justin through a slightly modified version of the very famous crypto conversation. Hot tech ground back in one second.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"reshot" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Pit using AI instead of expensive reshoots has cut those costs in some cases by as much as 90%. Nathan Hager, Bloomberg Radio. And I'm Denise Pellegrini in the Bloomberg Newsroom. Berkshire Hathaway quarterly results are out. Billionaire Warren Buffett's conglomerate reporting operating income for the second quarter that beat the average analyst estimate. And Bloomberg's Max Reyes calls it a comeback story for Berkshire's units. insurance I would say looking at Geico you know we're talking about them being unprofitable basically throughout last year, little in the prior year, and now this year for the last two quarters they have been able to manage a profit. They really cut back on advertising. They hiked and all that has contributed to this beat that we're talking about. And Bloomberg's Reyes also says though now given the price hikes and ad cuts we're seeing the number of Geico policies go down. Some are worried inflation is still with us after that US July jobs report. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers says the Fed needs to keep inflation fighting. I continue to be concerned that there are real inflation risks. I look at the big shortages of labor in all kinds of healthcare activities and I worry about what's ahead. I see evidence of some turning back upwards in growth in housing prices. I see problems emerging on the supply side from the hot weather from the new problems in the wheat market coming out of the Ukraine war and so I think we've still got very real inflation risks to which we have to be vigilant and I hope and trust that the Fed will stick with its determination with respect to inflation. And Summer's on a special Bloomberg Wall Street week podcast from the Aspen Economic Strategy Group Summit in Colorado. But Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic tells us he's not too worried about inflationary pressure from wage increases. It doesn't surprise me that wages are still strong. You know during this whole high inflation period worker wages have trailed inflation for quite some time and so we're still in that catch -up period and I expect that we will still see strong wages. Bostic also commenting from Colorado and you can hear more of their comments on the full edition of our Wall Street week podcast. And as we've been reporting a social influencer facing charges after an offer to give away PlayStations and other items in Union Square in New York City quickly turned into riot a yesterday. This mom forced to shelter with her infant daughter inside of a bank. I'm just trying to get somewhere where I can just keep her safe, keep her out of the crowd, keep her away from the tear gas and all the noise and people trampling over each other and I just wanted to keep her safe. And police are charging the influencer, Meantime, Kai Sinette with charges multiple and Global News 24 hours a day powered by more than 2 ,700 journalists analysts and in over 120 countries. I'm Denise Pellegrini and this is Bloomberg. It's time for today's STEM Tip. A lot of us probably struggle with sleep hygiene, how to fall asleep, stay asleep and get restful sleep. But did you know that improving your sleep hygiene could help improve your overall health? Health Break, a break. STEMC Health Plan dives into this topic with advice and tips you can use from our expert wellness health coaches. Listen now to find out how you can start improving your sleep at UPMCHP at UPMCHP .US .HealthBreakSleep. That's UPMCHP .US .HealthBreakSleep. Ok, you know recycling is important. No one wants plastic in the ocean. Here's a cool way to repurpose a plastic bottle. Build an awesome terrarium. Cut a large plastic bottle in half and fill the base with sand, pebbles, potting soil, and your plant will grow sealed

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
"reshot" Discussed on The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
"You got to go to the movies. And the good news is John Wick is back. The bad news is operation fortune has not been much noticed by anyone. Sonny munch is here, the official movie critic of the Hugh Hewitt show. Airline miles rolling downhill towards him faster than boulders in an avalanche. Sunny, I want to talk to you about operation fortune and Guy Ritchie before we go to John Wick. Why didn't no one know that movie was out? It was very entertaining. Well, you know, that movie has had an interesting and kind of cursed release. It was supposed to come out, it was supposed to come out last year. It was supposed to come out more than more than 12 months ago. And it ended up getting kind of caught in the Russia Ukraine news cycle because originally the villain in that movie was a series of Ukrainian gangsters. Oh my gosh. No kidding. Yeah, so it got kind of caught up in that news cycle. The final version, they edited out the Ukrainian gangsters. They changed the villains around a little bit, I think. I don't know if they reshot any of the scenes or if it was just a little bit of sniffing here and there. I mean, I for one really enjoyed operation fortune. Even the fetching misses Hewitt, who generally doesn't, she won't go see John Wick, but because Hugh Grant was it using the Michael Caine access. She wanted to go see it. Yeah, so this is the second movie, I think. That Hugh Grant has done with Guy Ritchie, the first was the gentleman, which came out. A couple of years back. And I feel like Guy Ritchie is kind of unlocked something a little bit different within him. He's not. He's funny and bad. Yeah, no, it's interesting what he's doing. Anyway, I like to operation fortune a lot, but because it got kind of, again, it got wrapped up in all this. And there was also stuff with the distributors so that this movie was financed by a company called STX, which has kind of gone out of business that sold off their interests. So this got bought up by I can't even remember who MGM or somebody.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Sonny Bunch Discusses Guy Ritchie's "Operation Fortune"
"You got to go to the movies. And the good news is John Wick is back. The bad news is operation fortune has not been much noticed by anyone. Sonny munch is here, the official movie critic of the Hugh Hewitt show. Airline miles rolling downhill towards him faster than boulders in an avalanche. Sunny, I want to talk to you about operation fortune and Guy Ritchie before we go to John Wick. Why didn't no one know that movie was out? It was very entertaining. Well, you know, that movie has had an interesting and kind of cursed release. It was supposed to come out, it was supposed to come out last year. It was supposed to come out more than more than 12 months ago. And it ended up getting kind of caught in the Russia Ukraine news cycle because originally the villain in that movie was a series of Ukrainian gangsters. Oh my gosh. No kidding. Yeah, so it got kind of caught up in that news cycle. The final version, they edited out the Ukrainian gangsters. They changed the villains around a little bit, I think. I don't know if they reshot any of the scenes or if it was just a little bit of sniffing here and there. I mean, I for one really enjoyed operation fortune. Even the fetching misses Hewitt, who generally doesn't, she won't go see John Wick, but because Hugh Grant was it using the Michael Caine access. She wanted to go see it. Yeah, so this is the second movie, I think. That Hugh Grant has done with Guy Ritchie, the first was the gentleman, which came out. A couple of years back. And I feel like Guy Ritchie is kind of unlocked something a little bit different within him. He's not. He's funny and bad. Yeah, no, it's interesting what he's doing. Anyway, I like to operation fortune a lot, but because it got kind of, again, it got wrapped up in all this. And there was also stuff with the distributors so that this movie was financed by a company called STX, which has kind of gone out of business that sold off their interests. So this got bought up by I can't even remember who MGM or somebody.

Making Podcasts Great Again
"reshot" Discussed on Making Podcasts Great Again
"Hey everybody, it's JL. Yes, it's one of those big important items up top. This Sunday, February 20th, if you have showtime, my episode of billions will be on. I still have no idea if I stunk or not, but let's all hope I didn't. But 9 p.m. on showtime were available anytime on Sunday if you have the showtime app. So that's it. Big announcement. I also have to reshoot my special, but before I get depressing, why don't we just get it into this episode and see what happens? What's.

The Pest Posse Stampede Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on The Pest Posse Stampede Podcast
"Visionary in career here at the best bazi. That's right you are. And i'm glad you're here because i would be sad if you did. Not show up to that out smarting that it was a monday morning or as a case of the mondays. Yeah exactly way. I've author the had wrangler at the past fosse. Welcome everyone's to foster. What are we gonna be talking to everybody about today. We got a bunch of guys. Oh yeah this is the first one we got. We got a bunch of today. You know we got the great privilege of having just of latino from allergies technologies. We got check cer- from corbett exterminating and we got jim. Ballard phd and bc. They are in the house. Guess what they're going to be talking about a really kind of a new inventive bedbug program that was developed for affordable housing communities. I thought was pretty cool. And joseph reshot to us about it and pretty excited to bring this to everybody. Because i think they've i think they fit on something that's really gonna work for for those affordable housing situations. Yeah actually you know what's really cool is they've got this totally proven results record over the last couple of years and they've been cutting bedbug incidents by ninety seven percent in affordable housing. I'd say that's pretty significant at is significant. It's amazing program. Yeah exactly before we bring on her gas. I wanted to introduce everyone a great way to show your support for what we're doing here at the past policy you know. This is kind of a cool thing. We came up with we. We tried the patriot community. And that just kind of fizzled. Because it's kinda hard and that was just set up as members any you know just as memberships only show your support. We did have a few people with it but we figured a better way to show your support. You could just go in and literally bias a cup of coffee. That's all you gotta do. It's a one time donation thing two bucks you can just show your support here for the past bossy. It'll go a long way as far as you know making sure we can keep bringing this content to your everything we we we certainly appreciate it. There is a membership. You can sign up for that and do a monthly amendment but we thought it was a pretty cool thing that i will upon just wanted to bring it out to everybody and let you know you can show your support by buying a cup of.

DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"Jessica. To me is a plane tomorrow. I don't think i could have. You see datta all the tubing who got diverted flight. It's tamara time-lag hole at the ese by from with luggage outta Classes are holiday. Happens eggs marshall to talk to him phonic ratio to shoot them. Oughta be willing to get the daca to berea chemo. Eight at the lakers for the army splintered. The taxi was his in tacoma. That way light zantac. I wonder if model half of the economic loss. usa out together. We traore mccully one way trip. When i i wanna tomorrow Bottles barefoot reshot flight in numbers e young left lane in the. Us bungalow on this ever got the plane in us. Bang lie us bundling. Your door was shattered. They like johnny on twenty eight return ticket. Trona design same as buddies aiba about legal while naked. The cold down. What are we to the mckinley. Monitoring our data takei khalid our perfect on by bottle of the tacoma. We die yes they cover eight emmy a quasi. Sc got on at through. I got the ath- got to not get i'm command tomorrow. Amny gotti amylase damara Take alums Resemble the legacy local penned again. I'm gonna benefit. I'm predicting nina can do lift. Lift satan mayor left for them. And i do the same. When i'm book kindergarten Rattray unofficial after gotti terror To the stimulus brogden and we'll be like accurate ship. Ao come south forever. Fordham cleaner flair. What i want to 'cause our for the ramona bite at is item. So nam dupree get a sports fan. Barak to four hundred thirty five in an excellent at that is on cra- guests reveals another millsap to the league. Doug agassi i'm short-sea big different sorts of what i'm gonna yet you try it for him by is just like a podcast to get here as she better female fence. Jim nepal luggage. She milton these learning about but we went to the minutes. applicable adding spaghetti because sheet annotated at lunchtime Last book cooks alert. I'm because illegally. I'm much maccabi was illegal illegal to watch to to nominate eight in hawaii. Just what a second here. I'm about a look campbell in are lamictal spatial. Because he told him. What are we talking about. The big recognize guys donald traced. Mitch could've been good. Did them.

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast
"Well you won't get a little dab of this this morning chris. You're well rounded mike grassi. And i know a little bit about what's going on about everything and if christie. Chris kardashian through regina and you face trust me. You're going to be in that bedroom. Yeah what's up my grass. You smashing kris jenner. Ru sat out to you know you. Are you know you smashing. I don't care what your political beliefs are. Whichever religious beliefs are mike grassy diving right in. Oh lena mont- oh well first of all. Thanks scaring the crap out of us. No problem i said it got me. We really appreciate which the lights thank everybody. This is jimmy jimmy. If it wasn't for jimmy stay right. There extended okay okay. Well that's jimmy. If it was jimmy we wouldn't have to show today and also chris thank you to own a okay. Okay all right. Thanks was scaring the crap outta me. God bless you funny mom shoutout to who else reshot by a bet you might you see when he wrote him when he wrote in their shot out to wanda santiago's shepherd. I don't know if she's still there. Hey wanda every man in that chat room smell chris. kris jenner. every man no kardashian. Every showroom smashed shoutout to allen suave mcallister. Hey ellen good morning randi montgomery. Hey girl hey. How are you. Shout out to omar roemer cumberland. Hey omar omar omar sought man. How you doing man shot out to valerie thomas. Hey valerie valerie what are you doing. God bless a shoutout to wm dixon..

DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"Fm to get started with them on eleven shocked to deport. novocain tagline in in the board consensual summit. I'm sure and we'll dump I'm gonna structural Risha have made you don't forties while reshot. I'm out i'm not going go put on. Bishop deliver chassis over the hennessy to shed is again psychology customer near up to sheila secret just philosophy shiite biracial philosophy base requested to dump the ballot. Page cannell on both sean for cooking. Look i mean well talk on. Some gotti sorta easy who takes. That's sort of a trump. Okay i'm mean going on meat. Cutting precaution programs army economic output. See both mona stakeout dolby. Sheba kennedy from catapults teresa to all. I mean social media the Take digital social media friends monaco. Bonnie steve welcome to get shaved I me mrs. I'm going to be starting monday..

Fore Play
"reshot" Discussed on Fore Play
"Yeah it's I mean it is you know. I guess it's a little bit difficult for people to go back in in that time and picture being someone other than than tiger being obsessed tigers we look at it as so icon monumental but like us that when somebody's making comments like i can live my see game here you are you know. You've you've been a top ten player in the world for. I think over a hundred weeks in your career and year out there. Probably a lot of the other guys thinking like Now it ain't that easy like we're out here to play to. We can play some golf so imagine it's a little personal on some level india's you know tiger was always. I enjoyed playing tire. I mean every time. I replayed with tiger I look forward to it. in my opinion you know my career spanned long enough that i played quite a bit with nicholas. And he was in his late thirties and early forties whenever applied with him but You know then hispan- long enough to then tigers early years. I was playing with him and they were completely different. Kind of player both dominant but different. You know i get ask all the time. Explain the difference between jack. Nicholson tired woods. You know to me. Jack nicklaus new his strengths. He had a great inventory of what he could do. He knew his strength knew. His weaknesses and manage both played into his strengths and away from his weaknesses. Tiger is the only guy i've ever played golf with in my life. That didn't worry about the next shot. No matter where he knew he had that shop now. That must be fun to play golf like that. The most fun. Like i i mean i. I'm i'm currently in the midst of trying to do this breaking one hundred series. Where i'm working on my game all the time and i don't know where any shots going ever and i feel like anywhere that i end up now that i'm trying to get this new swing and implemented into my game. I don't know if i have any shots so to have the complete opposite feeling of that to be like. I'm gonna hit this ball as well as i can. No matter where it ends up. I'm going to have that shot. I think he's maybe the only person in history him nicholas maybe but him in particular who has had that feeling where it's fun. I'm i'll be able to hit this ball no matter where it goes. That's incredible i. I'm not sure jack had that. I think jack had some shots at. He didn't really want to put the ball in. And i think tigers locked up there. Reshot saying i've hit this shot before my life and i'm obligated again right here..

Bloomberg Radio New York
"reshot" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"The plants in the United States have now been shut after that cyber attack in this is according to the union there. Right The time here 38 minutes past the hour is time for global sports. Let's put a call out to Dan Schwartzman to take a look at Real Madrid with that shocking higher from manager Dan Yeah, Brian No one saw this one coming, but Everton boss Carlo Ancelotti will be returning to round Madrid to take over prison Indians have done six years after leaving the Santiago Burn a bio. It was successful by the way between 2013 and 15. Ancelotti led Los Blancos to wings in the Champions League away for super cop. FIFA Club World Cup as well as the Copa del Rey 61 year old signs a three year contract and will be formally introduced at a press conference tomorrow. According to Barcelona. President Jo on the Port Alina messy does not wanna leave Cam No. He has denied reports. The two sides have already agreed on a new contract. Six time belong Dorwin will become a free transfer at the end of the month with Patty Saint Command in Manchester City. Possible destinations. If Messi decides to leave the Catalan capital last summer, messy inform the club he was looking to leave was told any team you have to pay its €700 million release clause. Pickups at the French Open. Seven ceded Andhra Group led loses in five sets the young anarchist group in the first round as Rube let falls in the final 66 to 4. Meanwhile, topsy Novak Djokovic has no trouble advancing to round two and trade sets as district C drafting the Dal intensity Diego Schwartzman in the women's draw, autopsied Ashleigh Barty, surviving a scare, losing the second set before rebounding to beat American Bernard Apparent the first round. Others to move on. Include 90 carlina Pliskova 24th, seeded Coco cop 15 Elina Svitolina in 13th, ranked American Jennifer Brady. I'm Dan Schwartzman that your Bloomberg World Sports update reshot. Thank you very much. Indeed. For that I'm just going to check in with prospects that trading day. We're looking at their website gains there for the likes of Australia and Japan..

Biz Talk Radio
"reshot" Discussed on Biz Talk Radio
"We have had hepatitis B vaccines available for a number of years, even decades, But the older vaccines were a little bit difficult to get through the entire syriza vaccination because they required Reshot given over six months so many people didn't complete that month. Fully protected. We now have a newer vaccine called helpless of B. This is a two dose vaccine that you finished within one month and then you're fully protected so that in of itself is a huge advancement. With his wife partnered with the makers of helpless of the Dyna Vac to raise awareness about hepatitis C and about vaccination. You might be wondering, Is this gonna cause me any side effects it can cause mild side effects. Arm soreness or fatigue or headache, but you wouldn't be expected to have any severe side effects and again the upside it protect yourself from a really dangerous virus, two shots within one month Yeah, I mean, absolutely. And that's what astonishes me because this question I want to make sure we got this in because it's really bugging me. Why hasn't hepatitis B already been eliminated if there's been a vaccine available for more than 40 years? I mean, not everyone can be a chicken like me. What gives? It's a great question and up Until recently, we haven't really focused on vaccinating the general population. We were focusing on the highest risk groups. So those having unprotected sex those using intravenous drugs those with HIV, those who are on Dialysis machines for kidney failure. Etcetera healthcare workers included there, but in reality, this type of virus will continue to circulate in the community, especially a virus like this. That may not cause any symptoms. Might spread from person to person with an England realized. So now we focus on vaccinating Children, and we also have the vaccine available to adults. Even if you don't necessarily fall in the what is considered a high risk population. You can go to your doctor and get back to me. So this because you're concerned about being exposed to the virus and what it may do to you if you develop chronic hepatitis C I love that now, when you're talking to people about this, and of course you're a doctor specializing in this. What do you find to be the biggest shocker to your patients when they're finding out about this when they're saying, Oh, my God, I had no idea that hepatitis B blank blank blank. What do you find it to be? The biggest surprises When you're educating people on this. I think a lot of people don't recognize that hepatitis B can stay in your body long term. Right, and that it is a major cause of cirrhosis, liver failure, liver cancer, the major cause of the need for liver transplant. And so I don't know that everyone appreciates how severe disease that can be, but hepatitis B very different type of buyer. Unbelievable. You got a lot of people out there. Where do we send them? For more information, Helpless have be calm for information about hepatitis C about how to protect yourself. And about the vaccine. Happy with them. Be excellent, doctor. Just shooting and I knew the time would.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"reshot" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"The game. He was doing fine. The agent for quarterback Brian Hoyer says the back of has re signed with the New England Patriots as a 35 year old will battle for a spot in a crowded quarterbacks room that includes Cam Newton, first round pick Matt Jones and 30 approach. Jared Stadium lawyer did also visit the Jets this offseason on dance horsemen that your Bloomberg World Sports update reshot. Thanks so much Indeed. For that, Dan we are looking at the Asian trading day. We're looking for stocks in this part of the world to perhaps take back some of the gains. We saw some of the benchmarks on Tuesday. We are looking at perhaps moved to the downside and great tracking the declines that we saw on Broome Street. This is Bloomberg. Introducing pick up new free streaming service from NBC Universal. It's hit movies, current shows, live sports training bits and timeless hits on that's Why you Can't not watch pickup Watch your free upgrade for more stream now at peacock TV dot com. Law and Order has to be used for me now the markets in focus every Business Day, the Bloomberg Markets podcast with Paul's Weenie and met Miller under some sectors that you wanna have more or less exposure to. We've got to vaccinate the whole world analysis of the day's Wall Street action. What's the thought on Apple here? From Bloomberg Intelligence, Bloomberg opinion and influential newsmakers. The bond market was the boss Bloomberg Markets with Whole Sweeney and met Miller subscribe today in Bloomberg Radio. Com. The Bloomberg business APP or iTunes. This is Bloomberg. Daybreak Asia, It is 45 minutes past the hour time for a check of sports from around the world. Here's Dan Schwartzman. Thanks Brian. The.

SpyHards Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"That was a real burning call. He stepped into yeah. I can buy that. It looked it looked fairly real and then got out again and he had to slowly get out as a police. Join the guns on him. Like he said he's ho backwards was like burning up. He clearly commits to the role. Yeah physically That's great you mentioned the the prison seen again. He has to go mano a mano with a bunch of riot. Police officers and that looks great. He's clearly a capable soldier and new by that. Yeah i mean when he wraps his fist in the towel and is dousing himself at the water. And it's a really strong action moment. And i mean we've seen a ton of prison fights in movies but i thought this went did stand out as being a little bit unique which i wouldn't say for a lot the other action movie but it felt like they were kinda doing something a little bit interesting here and i liked what he's holding the guy hostage in the cell like moments like that he. He reminded me a lot of Jason bone in a sense that he's always two steps ahead of his enemy. Yeah so you say the riot the prison scene you know he's he's So far in on the floors whilst it makes the floor slippery. The gods get to him. It's just clever. He's thinking about these situations than he's outsmarting his enemies and that is basically the storage route film. He's ahead of everyone. Yeah overcomes obstacles. But that's what leads us to the end of the film where he Sauces out the guy the bad guy. He orchestrated the assassination of his fellow soldiers and eventually his wife played by laurie london and unfortunately the mother of his unborn child as well. Which is what propels film and get quite cool if them both potentially drowning. And then he's assayed because setting up for a sequel lot of underwater stuff in this movie He's also swimming in a submerged plane at one point and then yet the after drives off the bridge of guy pearce What did you think of though leading into that like this. We have this whole action sequence in basically a dilapidated building in russia with involving snipers it seemed like i felt like it was a very abrupt going from that sequence which i didn't think it was particularly impressive to the sequence with him. Grabbing guy pearce. I felt like we were cutting scenes out to like cut to the point. I liked the the squad versus snipers when they were pinned down thought that yet. That was good teamwork. They overcame obstacles working together. That was quite cool to see Particularly category any other members of the team from the two that we know the names of Whatever but after that he goes so he just becomes a machine destroying ends up near blowing a. He causes a distraction to allow his team to get out basically and then he's saying on the whole only yeah himself I kinda lose a little bit. Lack seems a little bit like stretch I can't remember anything. steals a car and drives off. Yeah pretty much yeah. Yeah and but then it's like we just cut to him grabbing guy pearson. A bathroom and i was like holy. Jesus almost feels like a reshot ending. I didn't get the impression. Because i think it was intel. They sussed out gave him a clue based his character. I believe so. Yeah i think it was the conversation with jamie bell. yes yes that make sense Yeah i think. I think it was quite a thing i wrote down with the is. The ending. Felt quite protracted Talking about the scene with guy pearce. Well it i i might. I can pay to casino royale. Yeah.

Morning Edition
Chicago Officers Must Now Give Medical Aid After a Police Shooting
"Footage of police killing 13 year old Adam to later last week captured the violent end of that boy's life. It also showed a particular policy change in action officers attempting to give medical aid after a shooting. Patrick Smith of member station. WBZ reports and awarding this piece includes some audio from the body cam footage of Toledo's death. In the moments after Chicago police shot 13 year old Adam to Lehto. Officers on the scene, including the one who fired. The shot immediately began trying to save the boy's life in videos. Officers can be seen giving the boy CPR and desperately calling for an ambulance. Within seconds of firing the fatal shot. Officer Eric Stillman started talking with to Lehto. Resentment reshot. Stay with you Stay with Temple, Get an ambulance rolling. Somebody bring the medical kit. Now their life saving efforts were urgent, but ultimately futile. It was a much different scene than one captured in Chicago's most infamous police shooting video, the 2014 killing of teenager Laquan McDonald. And that Dashcam video after MacDonald had been shot repeatedly. 16 Times, Chicago police officers stood around as McDonald lay in the road, never doing anything but kicking the knife out of his hand. University of Chicago law professor Sharon Fairley used to run the Chicago agency that investigates police shootings. The incident that really sticks with her is the 2016 fatal shooting of 18 year old Paul O'Neill. An unarmed van shot by Chicago police. Young Paula Neil was shot and he's lying on the ground and They're just standing around waiting for the ambulance to show up, And they're not doing anything to help him fairly recommended police change policies and instruct officers to give medical aid after injuring someone. That ended up being a part of the Chicago police consent decree. A recent report by the Marshall Project found that most police departments across the country give first aid training to police recruits. And half require officers to provide aid whenever possible.

Biters: The Walking Dead Podcast with Dianne
"reshot" Discussed on Biters: The Walking Dead Podcast with Dianne
"Don't tell people on twitter. Okay okay mom all right. So i'm not gonna nice people like garissa or marisa. I'm not going to troll. Kirkman on twitter. But i am going to say that on fills high recommendation and urging. I started trying to watch invincible this weekend. Oh yeah how. It's that i didn't like it. And i don't know if it's because it's animated and because right now. The only animated jam. I was rick and morty or c. n. We're liking the animated harley quinn series. Really he is hilarious and foul mouth and it's the girl from big bang. Oh i didn't watch big bang so oh but like the the actresses great She actually did are really cool. I think it was netflix. Hulu Like serious called the flight attendant She's a really really great actress. N like animated harley quinn. Who is snarky and can swear and it like it's better than birds of prey. It's better than yeah. It's it's probably some of the best harlequin out there. Okay so that doesn't really take us into housewives but it takes us in housewives. Have you seen the trailer for the new suicide squad i had. I think it actually looks good. But i am going to be one of those horrible people that oliver friends are going to hate on and say i didn't dislike the the suicide squad that was released a few years ago. I actually really kind of enjoyed it. i i didn't dislike it for the reasons that other people disliked it. I really really hated the affects the special effects surrounding in chanteuse and kind of that whole storyline but i liked the comedy that they added later on after Deadpool did so well they. They went back and reshot a bunch of scenes to kind of insert any. I didn't realize that Yeah because deadpool got an r rating and was you know had a bunch of dick and fart jokes. So they wouldn't add a bunch of you know crime jokes which were super funny. I liked them. But i do. I understand people's issue with it. You absolutely can see the you can kinda tell the difference. You know the shots that were just sort of edited in afterwards they. They sort of don't fit with the movie. But yeah. I like the original. I don't think that i am going to like the suicide squad riley..

The Sean Salisbury Show
NFL announces plans to move forward with 2021 draft in Cleveland
"Nfl's going to have a draft. This year tyler outdoors. At cleveland right. Yes cleveland clinic cleveland. In my right it is right. But why am i excited about cleveland. I wouldn't you be. They're winning team their playoff team. Great fan base. Why wouldn't you be excited. You ain't going to it the city. Why you've been there cleveland. No okay then. I i have. Okay cleveland eight. That bad and the people are good people in cleveland. So if you're not going there and a party you're watching. Tv why do you care you. One more flowers and ocean in the background. Let's go to hawaii. Then i meant didn't you'd go. Wouldn't you tyler to hawaii. Yeah go yeah we back in vegas because we really never got it. Vegas vegas is getting a reshot. Yes they are at some point in time but not cleveland. Folks are good people man. I'll bet you they do it up good too and for the for the old school fans. That are winning again. And there's excitement in cleveland. I'm excited for the draft. Picks get to go and then do their thing this year. It'll be fun to watch it. Intriguing draft with a lot of top heavy quarterback. Grab some good receivers. Some good players all over and a chance to fix your roster. That'll be coming up in cleveland. So good news from the nfl.

DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast
"Could've the abandoned federal mega. Equa- it pushovers. The yet to win doesn't accept us. Equity forty two for two point. Six forever Discipleship so i sent a i his own. I get bored mindset robinhood headquarters and headquarters chamonix but i the private jet kim private jerk in private sony. Gay susan with alexa. Fuck you robin lakers in at a main headquarters silence of the private jet product Present the game. A little games Robin hood nonsense robinhood. Other kasey law border. Look the tikhiniya. Grip done to robin. Cetera blue colonel showcases thirty Thermopylae robin williams shit nominee mugabe's Busy out of books. Grinner guy needle back Going on remember to hun not about the dot screen every grade capacity alone. Must gaped tweet corridors quintin pm until again good our number put which. I knew that we said journalists. Hello a broad square garden down. Kim buddies idea got an income. Ride this private. The about the Shop pusher niceness nightclub Placid don't top pushes leaking nearly tarmac thrown in there. Very low for Bull gaglione Governor non obvious cutting they say it'll on eddo vedic engineer. Adobe corporate for matter co adequate engine militia Engineering registered tournament. Eraser them by bloomberg meta seriously just to get two zero. Bielema costs are dixon bomber. Mozambique obama's louie twin cred. it'll be. It'll be jackson bond after engineering bold along. I did with me on his. I'm ready shot. Kanban initially registered voters zibanejad's allah registered for the victim broadcasted official Holy lonzo balancer going shish other fish visual go ahead. Yes they reshot. Reshot rish racial from going to shop this from the government. Can you just never from bloomberg nettie numeracy. Quite quite what the people could see moving. Come under normal dc gained those auto coin monisha maintained joined barnabas as a whole dot squadron. Will donald john mccain be battlements Mentioned baseball chiapas of the monarchy assistant to musk. Lebanon's powerful Liberty don't own distillery got be said i'm gonna just a little story guess only out throughout the i'm joe our shot showbiz ishmael marisha about whether forecast broadcaster social media link onuma show. You'll do potential link. Barbecue showed up description event. I'm they have photo liquid into the upper. Hr Independent asks for despite the Said bollywood or your platform import pub from the avenues from dependent on them out. We will do the bundle. The do the Didn't help with jon. Allen said amount After from i won't sooner Cumulus steps by steps for limited exposure. Your debate sucks reporting flown by orchestras step by exposure. I won't even danny glover I'm on the email app. Not expert button. it will need disorder the bind. She'd text each month Brunetti shuck But a b. she Up when walker. they're going to go osh gentler. Weisman belittling districts from books. The data out. I'm not saying what the discord Jewelry did though asia timezone shackled gamut. But could it be done the way trump will be day..

Popcorn with Peter Travers
Daniel Kaluuya on new movie 'Judas and the Black Messiah'
"Walk to popcorn where we tell you what's happening at the movies and there's a movie now called judas and the black mesa. That's so good that will you can watch it now. You need to finish watching me. Daniel speak but when you see it you're going to see something extraordinary and you're going to see my guest today. Daniel columbia in a really amazing performance where he brings the spirit of someone to life and that someone is fred hampton. So congratulations to you. Then on i think most markets in what. I realized this is the very months for years ago. That get out opened yeah. I'm glad humphry as of that black comfort. Low two years a year off. The gal black pants came out in february has very much every year. You're just working in working in doing this. And you've got that oscar nomination after we last talked to. Are you just impossible. Now had you become A complete tyrant on the set. I think i was always a tyrant allowed. This kind of spaceman allowed me to be more tyrant. So i just i just like you know. I liked ice cubes. In one cup blueberries in another and then some soda in. And i don't even like soda but i just wanna be ir like a roman tyrant. I don't wanna be like a new. I on the roman like the old that that's own. You know what. I mean when something like that happens and of course you had done so much work you know in england theater. You scanned you. Were doing all of this stuff. But get out was a kind of a breakthrough that changed your life. Didn't it change my life. You changed my life a lot to catch up to that or with me. Like only think eli lawshield. Go up to happen with go in all that time in an all the things you've done whether you're did black panther whether you did queen it slam whether you were in widows this working with the most amazing people and doing incredible things and in this case of with judas and the black messiah. You're playing this real person. Fred hampton so fred hampton. We know and i think here in america to it was yes. He was the guy that led the black panther party in chicago and new annoy. He was the head of it and died. Tragically young. and that's what we know. We know those two things and finally. There's a movie that says he had and he had a spear any had something that was happening. How did you get attached to it. That's the on on the set of a powerful on reshoots ryan and zinzi kuebler Produces film to decide and say. Oh we we're making a film about fred hamilton. Love to be bothered a mess. Chairman fred keith is is in it as well Unshackle king is directed. Just feel alive. Kim i really their intentions and reasons really spoke to and so it was that i was like i just felt really on that the full of me in that way and they will let y'all send your treatment. They sent me a toothpaste treatment. Which is incredible and i met with shock in new york during the get out. What's he's not. You may have one of the tricks. setting on with you on that same trip. I sat down with shackle. So like i said that masako spoke on. I loved him as a person. I loved his reasons than would season off the oscars the first script i read judas nabet messiah and then i would say less. So what do you do. When you're playing this guy who we know of as a more of a symbol than a human being and that you have to create him as he is. How do you go about doing that. Which you do so brilliantly. Thank you solo work on the web but was kind of taken As a as a man you know and finding finding why felt he loved understanding why he loved him loudly loved and who loved him Of him you know the humanity politics is is like he has to have so much love so much karen in one food actualization black people in the black community in order to say these things in these ways like the speeches. I just felt like this identity in a remarkable man Amanda is to be remarked upon. But he is. He's a man. And i feel like brandon him. His humanity kind of puts into context his muddle

Bloomberg Radio New York
"reshot" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"A.m. right here in Hong Kong and in Singapore. It 6:30 p.m. on the eastern Seaboard of the United States and reshot Salaam and I'm Brian Curtis here in Hong Kong. We do have trading underway. Most markets will be back in action today, but not China. Not until the Thursday anyway, Just looking at Marcus this morning, a little bit mixed. We did have that spike in bond yields some investors, perhaps a little concerned about that details with Doug Prisoner in a few short moments for shock, we got a severe winter storm in the U. S, leaving nearly five million customers without electricity supper spot power prices in Texas, hitting the $9000 per megawatt hour cap for 1/4 straight day. To prevent the collapse collapse of their networks, electricity supplies from North Dakota to Texas of instituted rolling power cuts then that we let it is a former U. S energy secretary. He told us intimate, intermittent renewable power was largely to blame for the ongoing power crisis in Texas. So what we've done is we've moved away from that energy security and we used to have you here in the United States and furthered. We've exacerbated the problem by in some cases, making the base load power. And when I speaking to are the pipelines and natural gas pipelines dependent upon this intermittent form of energy, So when those windmills didn't blow in West Texas, that means the compressors on those pipelines didn't work and that natural gas perhaps didn't reach those natural gas utilities and other parts of Texas. Meantime, oil refineries in shale wells have shut due to unprecedented freezing weather. As the result, US or production is plunged by about a third more than 20 oil refineries have been disrupted by the polar blast. Goldman Sachs has launched an investing app for its customers. The bank, saying that investors can put money into automated portfolio is rather than individual stocks and bonds. It's part of an effort by Goldman to broaden its reach through new digital products. Stephanie Cohen is Global co head of consumer and wealth management at Goldman Sachs. We want to be the leading digital banking platform, and we're doing that really threw two different strategies, which is our markets directed consumer strategy and we've had lending. We've had savings. We've had an insights platform, which helps people manage their money..

Nerd On! The Podcast
"reshot" Discussed on Nerd On! The Podcast
"Of modern. I hope you look half as good when one hell draft. No he always been. This is his pitch man. What's stopping you from looking like this. That's what this is resurrection direction. Game parents tom killion number qualms i think my second one for a second so you go ahead and one really stupid and dumb. And it's the bill most nitpicky albeit in the harry potter films. The train sequence is like the worst lighting and cinematography. In any harry potter movie. So boring and basic. I'm like was this. A reshot isn't digital photography that like get it get it done. Just shoot it. So we see that. He makes contact with coaching and we could bring her in leader. And i'm like oh this purpose like they don't care about the train coming in like a shitty trained. This is the worst train you add. Oh this is so funny forecasting. It was just like who had train. Did you care about that train. Even audition like was just like or is that a family friend of another train feel rewatching like everything else. Cinematography in this film is like different from the other films. But like you don't know directors train. It just felt so not cared about that whole sequence. There's no point having the sequence air you could have just had him bump into coaching. Drop the books and then fucking walkaway like this is. This was terrible. I liked coaching. Eat in very potter. Musical better and then This one thing. I wanna ask a question. Really interesting volt amore. When he talks about lilly he says and your muggle mother. And i'm assuming muggle born mother because now he says it's incorrect ballet and so i looked at shit up and like she is muggle born so she's a mutt right to him he. She's basically impure. and so. that's why. I'm just like bro. You're even consistent on your nephew pure. You're nothing mike. All right baby but so i thought that was pretty interesting. And then Yeah i mean this is not like a qualm but this is kind of a funny thing. That i wanted to bring up. So it's rar panton. And i don't know if you've read this year. Third third qualm. I had oh and have a second qualm. This was as i question all that was it. But this is the funny thing that i thought and this is inequality but i thought this was pretty funny was i. Don't know if you've read rar pinson top bell like how he thought of the edward character from twilight. If you read the book every every page is just like the every character. Seeing etheridge's creams himself. Like there is like little like iraq peasant talking about edward. He's like aurora edward. I would feel like he's an axe murderer and so seeing him in this movie just reminded me all of that and watching. The was the kademi with with the in the film. All female academy baton..

The Healing Place Podcast
Jacob Reimann On Healing Our Children And Loved Ones in Order to Heal Ourselves
"Welcome everybody to the healing place. Podcast i'm your host terry walbrook and excited to have with me. Today jacob ryan and he is the founder of inner freedom healing so jacob. Thank you very much having me. Yes absolutely in excited to dive into of conversations about healing. And i want to talk a little bit about how healing our children and loved. Ones can help us heal. But i just introduce yourself to people and tell them what it is you do interface. Hi i'm jacob. Raymond and i run a company golden freedom healing and basically. It's not things. So i i work with small kind of high high need groups up to six people And we work online. And i kind of these mind tradition and experienced to guide them through going from suffering of some kind whether it be trauma all physical ailments or depression anxiety to joy. And i do that by Ready just guiding them to so they can understand which parts of themselves which which parts of them are still stuck in grief or anger rage will will of some kind anticipate guide them to guide them to those hawks themselves in a safe way and we basically spend time just just accepting accepting those parts of ourselves and that starts very simply. That's that's how i understand. Heating works yeah same. Love love your message right there though of helping people to get through the trauma but to get to that place of joy because they think so many people who've been through trauma or in pain and suffering feel like they can't ever get to that place of joy like it's it's an unreachable goal for them in it really truly as possible. I i'm i. I was convinced. It wasn't possible until recently and i was i just kind of what i find really fascinating comeback to second thing of what we do but why family fascinating in my healing journey was how how i was so used to being to and being terrified unjust. Just say when i was slightly. This panicking terrified. I thought that was actually quite good. Oh but then. I can look you looking back on it. Whatever experience on how did not have the obviously a life of kinds of things. I suddenly realized underneath the surface happiness enjoy and relationships and everything else i realized how how much panicking terra i was just just bright unjust destroyed underneath that kind of surface level of happiness and when she stopped to actually hail that that that globe of of terror at Start just getting more and more glimpses of just peace and silence in initially. I thought hang on. What's that strange. What's going on but be stay as you as you do. The work then yeah. It can actually dissolved fully and he can get to a point of just peace and joy and it's quite quite amazing feeling. I'm just getting used to it. I have to say but yes it is. It is a beautiful wonderful place to be. Yes yeah yeah so so. That's that's the work. I do with private clients and then i kind of about a year ago i thought to myself well i could just have a quite comfortable existence just working on a one to one in small groups you not to six people and we basically shed shed healing space shared the journey. And it's an healings. I've found is a lot more effective doing it in a group and you'll focusing on a similar aspect of ourselves that we haven't accepted yet Through a hot three three concussion. And then i thought well hang on there. Were you know millions of people out there. That may be a fold private work or don't have the time or so. What what how. How can i teach the process. How can i actually get it out there. That people can for themselves and it's and it's based on a bit breath work intention acceptance ray simple and i'm sure he's got a lot of experience with with this kind of approach to healing. So i'm craig today. A kind of mini hailing course which. I'm just about twenty twenty thirty people testing out. Now giving me feedback going to be reshooting christmas and then launching it very low Investments that people can actually learn the process themselves. Stay safe which is really important as their as they kind of in accepting during through the of them they'd rather not not go through so you can't escape yourself but other people have a real fair of of facing those parts themselves which should broken yes. Sure so it's those two things and then there's a big serve community that i'm planning people can share share the burden with each other in a safe supported. Way

Bloomberg Radio New York
"reshot" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"To win over the Steelers tonight on Sunday night Football. The sixth day Washington football team on the road to the 4 10 and one Eagles. Washington will clinch the division and head to the playoffs for the win. I'm Dan Sportsmen that your Bloomberg World Sports update reshot Thank you very much. Indeed. For that, then we are looking forward to a ton of data in the shape of purchasing managers indices across this part of the world with Korea, Taiwan, China, Of course, most notably Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand. It's all of the Philippines. Even as an insight into how manufacturing ended 2020 and Mrs Bloomberg Daybreak Asia. It's 45 minutes past the hour time for a check of sports from around the world. Here's Dan Schwartzman. Thanks, Dad. Big day in the Premier League is Leicester City moves up to third in the table, The 2 to 1 win it. Newcastle Manchester City moves all the of the fifth in the table with the dominating 3 to 1 win over Chelsea at Stanford Bridge. United States International Zack Steffen, making his first Premier League starting goal for Man City, as Anderson was self isolating the 60 players testing positive for coronavirus. Meanwhile, in La Liga Medical Madrid gets past the lobby is 2 to 1 on the Luis Suarez scored in the 90 Minute or Barcelona slips past US Co one nil as Frankie Dion scores in the 27th minute, Big week 17 Sunday The NFL season is a Ravens clinch a playoff berth of the 38 to 3 win over the Bangles as Baltimore rushes for a team record 404 yards. Meanwhile, the Giants knock off the Cowboys 23 19 meeting. New York will win the NFC East if Washington loses legals on Sunday night Football. Elsewhere, the Patriots beat the Jets 28 to 14 as Cam Newton throws for three touchdowns. The Cleveland Browns head to the playoffs for the first time since 2000 and 2 24 2 20 to win over the Steelers on Tom Brady threw four touchdowns in a Buccaneers 44 to 27 win over the Atlanta Falcons NFC East matchup on Sunday night Football's a six and eight Washington football team is on the road. The four attended one Philadelphia Eagles as Washington will clinch the division head to the playoffs with the Wind. Alex Smith is starting at quarterback for Washington after missing the last 2.5 games with a calf injury. I'm Dan Sportsmen that your Bloomberg World Sports update Markets headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day at Bloomberg, calm the Bloomberg business APP and at Bloomberg Quick Take This is a Bloomberg business Flash Everybody 13 minutes before the top of the hour and we update markets every 15 minutes here on Bloomberg Radio. Well, stocks do look set to push higher today, the first day of trading for 2021 as we get kicked.

Baby-Led Weaning Made Easy
Why You DON'T Need to Wait 3-5 Days Between New Foods with Carina Venter, PhD, RD
"Here is karina ventner talking about why you do not need to wait three to five days between new foods all right. Hi karina welcome to the podcast. Thank you bain vegetation. Will i cannot tell you excited i am. I have been a huge fan of your work for awhile. Now and i had the big smile face. I heard you on the recent fair webinar saying that. We don't need to be telling parents to wait three to five days between introducing new foods and everyone on my team. We were watching simultaneously. All shaking your heads and yes yes. Finally someone has the courage to say this. So i'm wondering if we could talk just a little bit about the infamous and confusing guidance. That parents here to this day all the time. it's usually from their pediatrician. They think they need to wait three to five days between trying new foods with their babies. Where did this come from. is it true. What are your thoughts on that statement. So the interesting thing is i work very closely with dr gupta. Who recently published a paper on this indicating that up to about fifty percent of pediatricians to vice families to follow this advice. Am i e waiting three to five days a week trying new foods and so when the wind back and tried to find ways this originate from we cannot actually find regional data but it is clearly the advice that is currently displayed and available on the american academy of pediatrics website. And also on the same for disease control websites over the embassy. Dc still stylized patterns to wake up to five days between introducing new foods and and we are hoping that they will be reviewing this advice. Certain okay what would be like the reality of that actually happening. Like i know how. Some of these bodies work. I think for example like twenty years ago when i was studying to be a dietitian we were taught. Wait until age one to introduce egg white and now whom you look at the data we know that the earlier deduction of the allergenic foods helps prevent food allergy. I think back like well. Why were we learning that and being taught that there was no evidence to support that just like seemed like a good idea. And i kinda get the same vibe with the three to five day recommendation. Like it's out there but it's not cited it's not referenced is not based on any evidence and yet it's become the the day facto recommendation. That parents are still hearing. How can we change this. If there is no research to support that yes you know. I wonder if it will go this way as the early alison advice said. We're not started my phd in two thousand one. The advice in the united kingdom at the time was not to give peanuts in hydro infants up to about age although the exact Fans from hottest families may wish nor to introduce peanuts up to three years of age and they need was actually the data from my phd sharing that. Hang on you know. Perhaps that's not the right advice. It was an observational study. At the time. They didn't have to go to change the guidance. From saying don't wait to give but they did actually change the guidance to say we're not really sure if we should wait with introducing peanut allergens actually took a very well conducted are not and the trial introducing peanuts and early life in the first year of life and in hydro infants to actively change the guidance to say now we do want to introduce peanuts actively in the first year of life and so i'm not sure if the street you five days waiting advice would go the same way. Hopefully we can have some day and perhaps we will talk about the diversity data later on. Perhaps that's good enough observational data to say well. Perhaps you know we could just say we're not shooting reshoot weights three to five days and then i wonder if it will take an our cd which will be difficult to conduct but to get us to actively jank the guidance say we can do one new food everyday and to discuss observational data about at least food preferences when we don't wait three to five days and if you would be interested in that yeah and i think my audience there maybe familiar with peanut guidelines in the leap. Study that she's mentioning. You guys is the learning earlier about peanut allergy. And it's this landmark study. That really just changed the way. We look at the introduction of foods. But i'm just curious carina is there anything underway. I mean are you and your team. Would you ever consider doing a randomized control trial about the waiting three to five days because as far as i know having done this anecdotally with tens of thousands of families there's never any adverse reactions that occur from introducing low risk foods one per day. Yes we built in that observation pad for the allergenic foods but as far as introducing the low risk foods one per day. Do you recommend that as well. Because wouldn't you see the majority of the indicators of an allergic reaction in the minutes and hours following the ingestion of the food not days and weeks later are not aware of anybody doing an archie really focusing on the three to five days introduction. I would love to do a study like back but we still have more work to do in the food allergy wealth and so i am involved in a trial that will start. 'em eddie next yet. Nate by dr chicago from chicago way. We will actively be introducing major allergens in the first year of life compared to control group. I'm working with you very wonderful. Dietitians on the study as well and we will be monitoring how long the parents way between introduction of foods in the active drought baby will be advising to just do one new food today and versus the control group which will hopefully still wait three to five days so that we do have do not competitive groups and hopefully that will give us enough information to go back to the cdc and the ma ap and also that national institutes of health and site while perhaps this is good enough data to now withdraw that guidance.

Yeah, That's Probably an Ad
The Best Ads of 2020
"You're listening to yeah. That's probably and the ad we podcast. We've talked about marketing media technology in pop culture because in the end everything is an ad especially this week. Because it's our ads of the year episode. Look forward to this all year. We get to nerd out about which adds stunts activation chains weird random social media responses from brands. We really liked this year and joining me this year to talk about it. We've got enes alaya who covers Performance marketing experiential marketing for edwige. Ian it is always great to have you here. Hello thanks for having me. We've also got katie lindstrom katie as a reporter who covers up breaking news and quite often big creative campaigns that are coming out katie. It is always a pleasure to have you joining us from your in austin austin texas. Got to be here and We've also got jamison fleming senior editor for membership here at ad week. jamieson has He's involved in just about everything H- here dad wake. And so i can't think of someone better to have kind of a big picture over overview and opinions on a lot of the biggest work that came out of the year. Jameson thanks so much for making time for us. Yeah accent. it'd be here excited to really digest very weird here battle tossing. It really was and i have to say of all the years of doing this every year. The ads a determining the as years difficult just I'll go and give the the can alert in the sense that Add wigs twenty five ads of the year Including our number one pick are all on dot com as of monday So if you're listening to this Probably monday or later. You should be able to find that on advocate dot com this year. We also did a reader's choice Bracket for the first time where we let. We identified thirty two of the biggest campaigns of the year and again ads and weird social responses. And even some political fundraisers and people really went nuts with it Jamison unload by you. And i both been watching edwige stuff for a long time. The level of this readers choice voting online was bananas. Yeah i mean the the semi finals between oreos and stake of guts. Seventy two thousand votes just on twitter. And i don't think i've ever seen any twitter poll by any twitter user. Get seventy two thousand votes so kind of crazy. When two brands with loyal followings can do twitter to say at least yeah that one was a crazy match of oreo created a doomsday vault when among many other doomsday scenarios happening this year There was an asteroid supposedly headed toward earth and so oreo created an underground bunker to save its recipes and Other things so That was up against stay. Combs campaign on social media against misinformation which was a very different kind of form of marketing. But they're following turned out in force. Seventy two thousand votes later. Oreo was the winner. Only i will say by promising to follow back. People who voted thing and then and then had a real struggle to follow through on their campaign from us. So as we record this we are in the final round which is orioles doomsday vault versus The princess bride reunion which was a fundraiser for wisconsin. Democrats really brilliant idea. They brought together just almost every Living actor and a person behind the princess bride Fred savage couldn't make it because it was his brother's birthday and he was spent with him but Everyone else pretty much. He's alive was there and As a really fantastic idea. So we won't know the winner when we record this because those are being battled out over the weekend but we will be able to talk about our favorites. So with that katy. We're we're just gonna go round robin here we're gonna talk about. Each of us has individual favorites. We i am happy to talk about ad. Weeks official favorites. But let's start out just on individual katie tells about one or two that you really love this year. I was thinking about this and just kind of thinking back to the ones that i shared with my own friends and family this year. That are you know. There's some overlap in some that are just kind of silly oreos already shouted out orioles doomsday camp. But they're proud parent Short film they released a couple of months ago. One that i just thought was really powerful. And i ended up sharing with it with a bunch of different people just because i thought it was a beautiful little short film and the story behind it was at the two actors who play a gay couple are actually partners in real life and it really came through when i thought was just like a lovely example of storytelling and then to shut up the mid west. The canadian beer brand labatt made some ads in that came out in the summer but it was like they had to completely reshoot their campaign so many brands had to this year. After creating a summer campaign that was not pandemic friendly and then having to totally start from scratch and there's was one of the one of the first stories like this that i covered in more like in-depth way they literally got back from there shoot for their summer campaign on the same day. That trump announced a national emergency. And then they that these two creatives just like created these really funny ads from with it within their own homes using like a power washer to simulate tubing and using a spray bottle and a little treadmill dissimulate like wake boarding. So it's kind of a funny way to pretend like these midwesterners we're at the out at the lake having a good time when that wasn't actually possible this summer over the summer so those were a couple of them now. Did you see that one griner. No no i didn't catch that one. It's it was by the burns group in and it's a pretty small like regional brand. But i just thought it was such an interesting pivot to use the word of the year.

Armstrong and Getty
Coronavirus: Newsom orders bars shut in Los Angeles, 6 other counties
"Weeks after bars and nightspots in California were given the green light to re open during the pandemic the light has turned red again Jim reports bars and nightspots have been ordered to reshot nearly six thousand new cases were reported on Saturday alone the state is now more than two hundred eleven thousand cases of covert nineteen in the state some six thousand deaths governor Gavin Newsom has had enough on Sunday he ordered the bars and nightspots to close this comes just two days after he paused other re openings in the state young people seem to be driving this spike in the spread with roughly forty percent of new cases being in people between eighteen and forty bars not sponsor troublesome because drinking lowers inhibitions which causes people to ignore safety measures like masks and

Velvet's Edge
The Show Must Go On
"Said this last week in the podcast. I really truly feel this way. I have not been impressed by an an award show in a very long time. I wonder if it has something and you know it's funny because I shed friends texting me like that. They love certain segments that I thought were just terrible. WHOA yeah wonder if some of it has to do with the fact that like we're so close to it that we look at it differently but yeah like I texted a friend of mine? WHO's a huge Demi Lovato Fan and I thought she sang the hell out of that song and I commend her for getting up there and singing things? Something emotional but I thought the song was terrible so I wanted to know what a real fan thought and I actually really like Demi Levato and so I texted her friend and she it was like I loved it the lyrics voice everything and I'm just like really the lyrics cheesy and forced to me but I think people appreciate shirow moment. That's what was happening there. It could've came out crying. I mean what's the end of that. So you think it was saying okay. Okay got to get it back glycerin out. I do think that maybe something that played into our viewing experience variance was we were with a group of people. There are a lot of children running around. I couldn't really hear that much at the very beginning so I'm not sure if that tainted things for us I also also think that day was super heavy day with Kobe Bryant and all of this others passing away on that helicopter crash. It's just yeah the I think it had to be so kind of eerie to be at the stable centre room. Yeah don't you think yeah I mean I think it put a somber tone over the horizon which then I guess as a viewer made me want to be lifted a little bit more than everyone's doing these like slow ballads which are hard on television anyway. Right when you're grappling with like sadness sadness I guess you know a lot of people turn to slow sad things when they want to like be in their sadness but I felt like to make it good TV at needed did to sort of lift everyone up a little bit more just felt slow and Draghi. Obviously preplanned know this fact but we were watching site fight with another one of our friends who's in management and she said we because someone said something about. How do you get to pick the songs that you want to sing on an award show and she goes no? It's like the award show picks so actually I feel like a little bit. Shame on Grammy's because the show itself like the layout and the performances in like the what do you call. Ah that order. Wow was the run of show. Thank you That was very professional on your. I feel like the run of show is just like a little off. Yeah I mean I felt like if I you know I'm no award show producer but I feel like I would have started off talking with a moment of silence and a better picture. Kobe Bryant and the one that they put up a little worse photo of him ever and then I would have lifted the moment with that. Liz Oh performance. I wouldn't come in hot with Liz. Oh and Dan brought it down. I see what you know. I just feel like it should have just been the elephant in the room. Come in let's you know. put it out there Out there you know. Put our good thoughts out there for the families that were affected and and then try to lift everyone up right and it just everything felt really disjointed and kind of just felt so dated like there were so many incredible performers. That were nominated this year. That could have had life. Changing moments like Maggie Rogers tank in the BANGERS. You know what's the Guy Louis Paul d like arguably one of the biggest songs of the year and he didn't get there literally sitting here going who sat. He's the Scottish Guy Somebody to love. I wish a bit like a shoe and yeah but that's almost massive. It's huge and you know it was performed but it was. The melody of it was performed. Two New Lyrics works that Alicia Keys Sang. And I don't know like I just felt like we didn't need prince tribute. We honore a like. I Love Bunny rabbits. She was fantastic. But I would've done I would've had Asha McBride sang that song and it would have made it current it would have made it a nominee On TV yeah. It's all just fell old and and one of the things. I think that the grammys are struggling with is that they. You are having a hard time getting in younger viewers and that certainly I'll say that little insider baseball but well the grammy's used to be the best award show to me So Grammy's people if you're listening you can email us at casual at velvets dot com and we'll hook you up for free all their respects like I feel like we have some insight I look I get that. There's a lot of a lot of people that they're trying to please a lot of ways. They're trying to make a great show. I don't think it's easy but it just needs to be like let's lighten it up a little bit. Let's make it fun when Nick. Jonas Jonas having something green and his teeth is the most notable moment of the show there is an issue we called it. I saw it and then we have. That aren't we. Were going back and forth like yeah. Is it a missing tooth. I thought it was a gap in his teeth. I thought it was. I definitely thought it was a piece of salad or something and we were like. Oh God this is definitely trending and like while they were still on TV. It was like trending on twitter. And then he did the right thing this morning and admitted it. I love that. He admitted it. Oh It's just make fun of yourself just just laughed. Read a couple of funny tweets. It says this girl Alison says nick. Jonas had food and his teeth during his performance. And I think Joe and Kevin Purposely sleet didn't tell him as payback for breaking up the band years ago CA. This girl another girl says I'm jealous of whatever is stuck in Nick. Jonas t a girl that feels that feels like I don't know such dirty Little like he seems like such a child but he's he's a man now is he called the Jonas brothers so this girl says Damn Nick. Jonas brothers did him dirty for not telling him. He had an entire salad stuck in teeth during his performance. At the grammys as as as someone who like looks it. It dudes going on stage as like do you ever say. Let me see your teeth. Absolutely especially like Dirk is notorious for picking up food right before or he goes on stage. And stresses me out every time because I'm like if one Krung gets stuck in his beard whatever every time he does it as sand there like a hawk watching uh-huh eat and then when he's done chewing volley let me see your teeth out your dental floss. There was one time this was with bobby this year. We were filming filming idol. He got something stuck in his teeth. I didn't have any flaws in my little kit bag and I couldn't make it back so I had to give him a fork to start like a somehow found a plastic for and I'm like having him dig in his tooth holding up an iphone cameras so he can see himself. Yeah it's a trick I use. I take a straw the straw or staple ou a stable. I didn't have any tables on hand. But you know it's funny as I always end up having like a like something from a meeting that's been pop. Look there's a staple of us are carrying staples in my kit. People are like. Why did that exactly? Yeah but that was a big moment. The Nick Jonas actually glad that he made a joke about it he tweeted. He tweeted something along the lines of like at least you know I my green. Yeah yeah best way like admitted and guys what else are you gonNA. You can't go back and like reshoot it absolutely not. The show must go on Gordon. Well we want to talk about today because these are very casual moments. I feel like he handled it very casually very well. You just tweeted about it and make a joke. I'm sure his groomer is like hopefully we'll give her job. What is your top? Do you have like a top moment. Where you've seen someone actually just like keep going or the show must go on? I was in the room or like. Just maybe your favorite whichever way you the best. One is when foggy Peter Pants. I am so happy and God bless her. I mean peed her pants. When you you gotta you gotta

Bloomberg Daybreak
Wall Street retreats from record on trade cloudiness
"Futures taking a hit this hour is the trade war ways on sentiment closer sources close to trade negotiations telus Chinese officials doubt that a long term deal with the U. S. is possible for more details we're joined from London by Brandon Murray who is in charge of all things to trade at Bloomberg news Brenda good morning what art Chinese officials saying exactly and isn't much different from what they've been saying up to now well we're gonna hear a lot in the next couple of weeks about this so called phase one deal that the US and China say their they expect they'll be able to sign but what we're not but what this reporting shows today is that basically it's going to be one and done that the Chinese are not interested in addressing the the broader sort of structural issues with its economy that the US is pressing for so where that leaves us is a trade war that just kind of goes on and on until the other side caves and neither one is willing to do so at this point yeah I just spoke with Stephen reshoot L. of Mizzou whole who is terming this a new trade Cold War and one that in many ways the business community has already adjusted to so where does this leave things now if we are headed toward this is sort of long term impasse between the world's two largest economies it leaves both sides with their key demand on the table China wants the US to roll back the terrorists that are already in place and the U. S. wants China to move more toward a a market led economy and neither one of those neither one of those sites appear willing to give those things so what it means is we could see the the economies of both countries the U. S. is is grinding lower to two percent sort of rate in China just recently rate reached a a six percent rate which is pretty slow for its past couple of decades so we could just continue to see this sluggish you know kind of growth that we've seen both companies decelerate to going on indefinitely as long as these to trade war weapons that they're both sides have are pointing at each other continue to be part of the picture of course we saw yesterday the phase one trade deal at least to getting over the finish line thrown into doubt now that the APEC summit in Chile is canceled in this atmosphere of a potential long term trade impasse does that put this phase one deal into doubt now it does it it definitely puts the timing of the phase one one deal and the law and the location of it they don't have a location for the four presidents trump and she to get together and and sign phase one so we're still waiting to find out if that means they're going to wait a couple months and and meet somewhere else neutral territory perhaps but if if the both sides are pretty confident that phase one which is really just a superficial stuff could can get done but beyond that as our reporting shows today there's really little appetite on either side to to go much further yeah and in terms of that I mean where could we potentially see cracks in some of those long term is sticking points things like the terrorists is there a possibility that the U. S. might make some concessions on tariffs that could leave the Chinese to budge in some way on their end the one pressure point that the that's really weighing on Donald Trump and the U. S. economy generally is that business investment is really being hurt by all the uncertainty that terror created we've had a couple different a couple consecutive quarters of capital spending declining some of the economic numbers showed us this week the consumer meanwhile is staying pretty strong so if we continue to see that that businesses are continue continuing to a delay high and delay investments and that continues where the comet that could become a point where Donald Trump decides you know what let's let's you know get back to the table and try to offer some concessions then our last minute here are we hearing any discussion on these longer term issues the structural changes that the US is looking for are those actually being discussed I mean we we hear that Chinese officials are discussing among themselves that they're not willing to budge but are those issues on the table right now they're not on the table for phase one and what were reporting today is that China isn't interested in them even in a phase two unless the U. S. rolls back terrace so the longer term stuff is really being pushed out into the future and whether we get to those it's it's increasingly looking unlikely that that those will ever come or you know next year so say that those are ever going to happen Bloomberg's Brandon Murray with an important scoop on our trade team and this morning Brennan thank you Brandon Murray is in charge of all things trade for Bloomberg news he joined us from London

Monocle 24: The Menu
Hélène Darroze at the Connaught: Two-Michelin Star Restaurant Gets a Major Revamp
"The restaurant allender us at the casinos at historic hotel in Mayfair. The A two Michelin Star restaurant closed its doors earlier this year for full refurbishment and modernisation and it has just reopened after two months and how how much has changed. That's what we discussed with Helen when she visited me. Dory Oh studio one in fact two months while when the reshot shot because we changed a lot of things I we moved the kitchen. The kitchen is not in the same place. We moved everything you know what will we we used to have have a kitchen a- location the past. Reynoso one Marino's Owen sweet was everything was disconnected amongst the world kitchen of the not so we put everything together the Mauri the the hood section and the past three so and we move think and in place of the whole kitchen and now there is the chef's table so you can see everything moved and it was a big staff in fact so two months I think normally this kind of things should have been done inform- once but there are fifty to work on this refurbishment all day long and some night and during the weekend and we succeeded to do it in a short damn so what change in fact the dining room is a complete new dining room my icing you cannot recognize the other one you can and now we cannot even remember what what was the other one so the design up. Yovich is a new designer is that's not the one worked on the tawdry even years ago so is a French designer and we worked very closely together to bring a lot of elegance and immunity to this room so so that's what we try to do and and I can say that it's a completely new design ambiance and the yeah very different to each extent does the food change then whatever food after the I have my feelings of your food and that you cannot change from I started thirty years ago and and it will be like that all along my my chef life I will say and the philosophy is all about the product I am chef who always say that the story join the plate is not the chef but the product so I'm always think being a lot of attention to the product choose and I cook what I asked to. My sous chef is to be close down to the UK producer than we used to be. You know I'm French I came from and they came from or so from this region of France with she's the southwest and where we have amazing products Russell. It was easy for me to take the chicken from the southwest of France because it's all Michael checks tra- Dr Seuss chef now let's find the best of the chicken in the UK so and for many of the products like that I want to sauce my products from the UK restaurants ability to we have to be responsible on that and we have to work with what is around us and it doesn't make sense to bring taking crump from navision countries. You know we have a beautiful travelling in Scotland extra. Let's bring them and let them saw our Aristo said to work with the local product and producer and that's the objective is to have even if I also predicts still coming from myself and he goes that's my cultural

Collider Movie Talk
Phoenix, James Mcevoy And Captain Marvel discussed on Collider Movie Talk
"This first story is about dark Phoenix. And last summer, we learned the dark Phoenix was going back to Montreal for re-shoots. But sources told us at that time that contrary to reports a whopping three months of additional photography. That's a lot right there. They were simply going back for two and a half weeks of re-shoots on the third act of the movie. However, now we're finding out that, that might not. Have been the case in April. We found out the dark Knicks, the dark Phoenix ending was being changed in re-shoots from a space setting to a climax that finds the X men kidnapped and on a military train. Now, we've got James McEvoy telling Yahoo UK that the ending was changed because it was too similar to another superhero. Movie, here's the exact quote the end of dark v. Necks changed a hell of a lot the finale head to change. There was a lot of overlap and parallels with another superhero movie that came out a while ago. And we had no idea that we were dot dot dot com. Trailed off their you know the quote just ended. So let's jump into this, but before I even ask for your opinions, we gotta check the live chat, because there are a lot of people chiming in on whether or not they're planning on even seeing dark, Phoenix. David Jordan, Darrow says got my tickets already reviews. Don't stop me from seeing any DC or marvel movie has called for twenty said got mine. I ten minutes they went on sale. Sale. Kyle Johnson says I'll probably get my tickets next week going in cautiously optimistic. So back to that, quote now what movie do you think James McEvoy was referring to is pretty obvious was captain marvel especially when we talk about the difference in design of dark Phoenix, Jean grey taking away, making less flamy more different in that approach? So it seems to imply plus the train sequence we saw in captain marvel we have that in the trailers, and of course in the movie as well. So maybe there was a lot of that involved here as well. Trying to take away any kind of reference to cap the most he was the most obvious choice. Yeah. Especially when you consider the change in the setting of the third act to from cosmic to on a military train moving away from the cosmic aspect, and that's the thing that before Jeff Thompson here. I don't know if I buy this explanation to be honest with you have a couple of sources who saw this movie early cuts move in March of twenty eighteen and they tell me that the ending was already on earth. So I don't know if this is their way of. Hey, we pitched you space movie, but we had to change it because of that. And so now it's on the ground, I wonder if they're doing a little PR to cover their butts. I don't know. But it seems odd to me that they would say, oh, we're just gonna put it on the ground. Now. We don't want it to be Spacey when people had seen in the first an early cut of this film, and it was already on the ground in front of a certain monument in New York. So I dunno. I thought it was aqua man now there it is. Yeah. I you know, are you signing that sarcastic? It's nice. I don't know what the original ending was. I don't know what the new ending is other than it's on a train. I have no idea what movie could. All right. So even though we don't know specifically how dark Phoenix is going to end nor should we really right now before we even see the movie another question that comes from the story is should a movie even be changed for this reason. Because to me, it sounds like oh, hey. Maybe they should have taken a little more time to develop the story creatively so that you don't run the risk of having. Other movies out there being too similar to your own. That's a good point. Yeah. I don't know. I feel like we saw two different asteroid movies, we've seen to differ Truman Capote moves. It doesn't matter. It's about quality. Can you deliver the goods, even though the you may vote another movie? I don't think it really matters. It's a matters. Can you do it? Well, that's what as at the end of the day, a lot of movies have seen that feel similar to other movies, but they do a distinctly different and make it work with the organic structure of their movie. So I, I don't think it's a way to change things. Dark Phoenix was originally slated to come out before captain marvel anyway, right? So it's like they kind of had they beat captain marvel tha that ending. So why did they switch you know they don't think it's train. Yeah. Something, something doesn't add up to me. And this goes back to Jeff Snyder, the reporters number one rule for being a reporter, which is don't believe anything in actor tells you don't know anything. Well. To be fair. There's there's no to being there to James McEvoy. Things that were debating right now, whether or not their true aren't the specific things that James McEvoy pointed out and said the finale had to change. He was in saying, you know, we changed it from the cosmic thing to the, the trains. Right to stick to maga- voice, quote. I am of the mind that if it is, too similar than than. Yeah. I'm okay with a change. I'm okay with them thinking we have to change this differentiate ourselves in distinguish ourselves in the marketplace, particularly not being a movie that's going to do as well as captain marvel. If that is, in fact, the movie that we're talking about here. So I'm I am sensitive to those creative issues and I don't blame Kimber for wanting to go back and tinker with it. But yeah, I'm with you John, that a lot of this. This is just so much PR on the entire X men franchise, including the next film, which we'll talk about soon, which I don't really fault them at because this is a lame duck superhero film, none of these actors are going to come back and play these characters again, in the MC you Disney and Disney marvel trying to recoup as much as they can from this film. So they're doing this PR pushing I wouldn't put it past someone like McEvoy or fast bender to, like, okay, I'm going to speak about. These are the points. We'd like goes to hit. Okay. I'll do it as part of the PR programs. Part of promoting the movie. No prob. Problem. But I don't fault them. They want to make as much as possible gonna talk about new means a little bit. Same thing. They're just on recoup as much possible for they move on. I got. No. I don't fault them. I just wish I just think people can see through this.

Wake Up Call
US emergency aid for Venezuela arrives at Colombian border
"Jennifer, let's say showdown kind of you know, happening to me you've got Madero on one side telling his military, don't you let that aid in. And then on the other side, you've got the opposition leader one Guido going. We're gonna make sure that humanitarian aid gets delivered. So what now? Yeah. We well. We're waiting for somebody to blink. You're absolutely right. We got the the shops of this international bridge Kakuta on the border with Colombia. And of course, you've seen it. And there's a big orange tanker. That's kind of been put in the in the roadway there. Couple of big blue steel containers on either side and Medeiros come forward. And he's he's basically arguing that his nation is not a nation of beggars, and they have long rejected receiving humanitarian assistance, and there's no free lunch. And he says you want to help the country USA lift some sanctions on us, and we can do a whole lot better job. More efficient job of getting food and medicine to our own people. But on the other hand, you have Guido going. That's not the case at all. We need some help right now. Let's get that aid in. Yeah. I kind of just Johnny on the spot, isn't it? It's kind of curious how everything is a bit contrived about Guido. But yeah, that's the latest. We have to we have to do it right now. We gotta get that US supplies in right now. A lot of countries are very skeptical Greece for one they're they're looking for a if you will at unified European response and re government says, no, we're we're sticking with Madero. We're not going to be. Hopwood on board and respecting and accepting the interim president they say, that's that's bogus recycling with the guy. That's there. It's up for him to figure out what should be playing in a few shippers country and try to figure out some kind of a a way forward that helps the people in Venezuela by the Venezuelan. Okay. So they're saying that contrived in the sense that that Guido knew that or let's just say that the US contacted him and said, hey, we're going to have aid come in. We're gonna make you look like a hero to all of these people. I mean, he, you know about the creepy made in December, don't you? Yes. He was in the US, right and Columbia who was in Brazil. They got a new right wing president there, and it's like twenty percent of the country in Venezuela. This guy was. Hey, this is a guy who's gonna be your new president and a lot of people scratching their heads. Yes. They're feeling the pinch of of a lot of serious serious economic problems there. But again, it's it's Madero says this is by any shape or form a slow burning coup. And of course, US if you will intelligence has been behind quite a few coups and that part of the world going back decades. And you know, what's going to happen here could turn into a civil war could turn into bloodshed. If we're not careful and try to get out of it some other way. Well, I know that a lot of it rests on the military, and with whom they side and at this point, they have been siding with Madero. Okay. That's fine. However, when they're getting paid their reports that some of the members of the military or getting like, the high ranking members like six bucks a month at what point did they go, look, I have no food. I can't feed my family. I don't have any. Money and then flipped their side and go, you know, what I'm going to go with Guido, at least he can get me some food at least he can you know, what point does necessity become the tipping point for them. Are you know that that's that's the sixty four thousand dollar question. Will there be personal tipping points? You bet. But but I don't think they've reshoot at this stage. You're looking at some film that came across the board this morning here with Madero yesterday addressing at one military base soldiers there, and and really mocking the the US attempt at a coup mocking John Bolton for what he called a a cool in the making. You said you are not the Defense Secretary of Venezuela go away. So at this point, the humanitarian aid is just sitting there, and we're just waiting for something to happen. Is that is that where we are? That's where we are. Right now. Exactly. So we'll see what shakes out. It's a it's an interesting ploy to try to get in and to persuade people through giving them things to try to get them on board. Just caught in the middle of this. This. Exactly. Yeah. All right, Tom. Thank you so much bigger later ABC's, Tom rivers, what a mess. What a mess. So you've got Madero go. No, no. We don't need your help. Yes. You do when people can't eat when you're paying your military. Six bucks a month. You do when you're governments in the toilet yet need help. At least accept the aid. At least your people eat. I mean, I'm not saying that guidos the perfect guy either. But I'm just saying can we? What about the people? What about the people who were caught in the

GSMC Social Media News Podcast
Kevin Spacey's creepy video looks like a cynical attempt at distraction
"Charge of allegedly sexually assaulting teenager in two thousand sixteen if you guys remember Kevin Spacey had a whole thing with that where he was accused allegations against him of sexual misconduct. And then people came out with other stories from his pass of other bad things that he had done when this news came out, the Netflix show house of cards, basically killed his character. Offscreen and then did their last season without him. He was going to be another movie. I think that dot cancelled and was reshot with some other actor. Yeah, he was just like disgraced. Yeah. It was it was crazy times. So the video is basically already infamous it's called let me be Frank which Kevin Spacey's character on house of cards was Frank Underwood and the video is Kevin Spacey decked out in a Santa apron, and he kinda has like the he's sounds like his character. Frank Underwood which had likes sort of a southern drawl to him on the show on house of cards. So it's kind of weird because you think maybe it is Frank from the show, but he's not on the show anymore and his dead. So I don't know and he delivers a direct to camera monologue. And again, it could be like the what he's saying could be about his house of cards character. But it could also be about himself about Kevin space. But it's. Because it's called let me be Frank which could be about Frank or just being left phrase, ready Frangieh just weird and people have oh, it's strange. He's a weird guy to me anyway. So I don't really like watching a lot of the things. He's in he's. Yeah. He's already strained. I think he's a good actor. I just like he's weird. Also, if you watch will and grace the amount of times, they talk about how Kevin Spacey has basically done bad things to like men comes off so many times, and that was way before the allegation Ackley, everyone knew about this and didn't do anything just terrible, which is like Harvey Weinstein, bad, right? And Kevin Spacey wasn't even that big of a per-. I mean, he was he's people know we is. Yeah. Not not like Brad Pitt. Yeah. Yeah. Easy. So weird. Yes. So again, it's weird could be his house of cards Gaechter could be him people. I've read people said also kind of like what's going on with Trump right now. So they're like making connections current political things, but then his house of cards character is like vice president. I don't know if he becomes president. But he's also in political things. So it's like so many so many different things. And again, he sounds like Frank Underwood the video like basically as recording this this from yesterday. He oh had seven million nine hundred eighty seven thousand five hundred eighteen views, which is so many where did he post it on like just on YouTube on his own YouTube? Oh, just so weird. It wasn't even on like any other social media. So anything just on YouTube, the video has more views than tickets sold domestically Paddington to I man or widows, and like, you probably can't, you know, YouTube views can be a little misleading. But that's still a punch yet is was he going off on like in the whole thing. What was he saying? I have a quote, it's weird. I wouldn't say he's super direct about what he's talking about. He just kinda starts like we all know what he's talking like just starts rambling on the whole thing is just monologue.

Mo'Kelly
‘Star Wars’ Boba Fett Movie No Longer In Development; Lucasfilm Focusing On ‘The Mandalorian’ Streaming Series
"Vision to life. Be it the Thawra be it the lion. King beat you know, all of his projects have that super quality of storytelling. I have no doubts that things will move forward with him. And when you look at just the overall arc of where they're going the marvel cinematic universe is going to have to do a whole lot. To let me down. They really are. I mean, you've got news coming out now about them, adding an actress from from west to show from thirteen reasons why Catherine Langford has been added. You know, we always talk about the individuals who've been snapped out after the final snap. She's a new character. That's being added to avengers for her role. Many right now are suspecting that she is going to be Kate Bishop who is a character who took on the mantle of Hawkeye within the character within a cast of the young avengers. That were like like totally of scarlet witch, and and a descendant of Isaiah. Forgive me for getting his name as a Walker the first captain America, who was an experiment of Tuskegee type experiment, where they Spearman on African American soldiers and created the first super soldier, and and his grant Grey's great grandson got a hold of the formula became captain America, you'd be captured black America black America. And so now the thing is became Bishop. Why because there's also news of Jeremy renner's Hawkeye character getting an offshoot film that goes into some more real cloak and dagger type spies stuff after the scarlet witch film this coming out. So a lot of people are thinking that that is a calf is going to be introduced at. There's also, you know, scenes of Gwyneth Paltrow and rescue armor out there. So there's a lot that's going on in this world and Kevin Feige with his wild self is now talking about dead pool survived the Thunnel snap. Why are you saying this to hype us up, sir? If dead pool should make an appearance. In ventures four. I will be done in a good way. If they if if they were able to bring those properties together not impossible. Yes, not impossible. And here's why it's not impossible. A lot of individuals were like, there's no way dead can be connected to the Morrison matter universe because of his rated r nature. This December they have actually reshot redone and done new scenes to release what a PG thirteen deadpool. Deadpool doesn't have to enter the MC you Cussing and doing all the visual humor which earned him. An are. It could just a short appearance. Whereas like, hey, you're gonna help me cliff the time line, right, right? As time traveling. I nine is you introduce deadpool Kevin Feige saying he's the fish because he was in a different part of the the world. I you don't know. Will he says also I've been waiting eighteen years to try to do something with deadpool? You're not waiting eighteen years for no reason, sir. This is the most Kelly show when we come back have something to say about the dodgers and their soon to be former manager KFI AM, six forty more stimulating talk. Microsoft pay has breaking news out of Indonesia. The lion. Air commercial airliner says it has lost contact with a passenger jet flying from Jakarta to an island off Sumatra search and rescue effort underway for the Boeing seven thirty-seven. But the BBC is quoting an Indonesian aviation official as confirming that that plane has crashed in the sea. No word on how many people are aboard. Now looking good right now for the dodgers game five of the World Series. Bottom of the eighth inning at the stadium. Dodgers trail. The Boston Red Sox five to one Red Sox. If they are victorious tonight when the championship the strong six point one magnitude earthquake hit the Facific off the coast of El Salvador shaking the region near the border with Guatemala today. It has not caused apparently any serious damage. We're check out your forecast. And the drive on the one on one next.